Friday

Parents confused about what exactly their young children should be drinking just got help from several large health organizations, which have issued a common set of recommendations.

Breast milk or formula, plain cow’s milk and water are encouraged; sweetened drinks — including most plant-based milks — are not.

Individual organizations have made recommendations about beverages before, but often not in a comprehensive way for this age group, said Dr. Stephen Daniels, chairman of the Department of Pediatrics at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. He led a panel that united experts from the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry, American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Heart Association.

The panel was convened by the nutrition research organization Healthy Eating Research, a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation program. The guidelines were released Sept. 18.

“For the average child who isn’t intolerant to cow’s milk and doesn’t have an allergy, we came to the conclusion that cow’s milk really is the best choice,” Daniels said. For families that take a vegan approach, some plant-based milks “are maybe a reasonable choice,” but parents have to be “very careful,” he said.

Plant-based milks may look and taste like dairy milk, but their nutritional value varies from product to product – and they just aren’t the same as cow’s milk, he said. Also, he said, “many of those plant-based milks – they’re sweetened. So, they have extra sugars and extra calories, which kids do not need.”

Marie-Pierre St-Onge, an associate professor of nutritional medicine at Columbia Medical Center in New York, represented the AHA on the panel. She explained that such milks are typically lower in protein and calcium, so they just aren’t as nutritious for growing children.

And from a research standpoint, she said, “We don’t have a lot of available evidence to say that these are safe for young infants to consume and that infants will grow well with plant-based milks alone.”

Fortified soy milk is a bit different, St-Onge said, which is why it gets the nod in some cases. But she and Daniels echoed the panel’s advice that parents who are intent on avoiding dairy should do so only with help from a dietitian or pediatrician.

The guidelines say parents should avoid offering all kinds of sweetened drinks, which include not only soda, fruit-flavored drinks and sweetened waters but also chocolate milk and the newer category of “toddler” milks, sometimes called “transition” or “weaning” formulas, which are often sweetened.

“We are trying to avoid any sweetened beverages for young children,” St-Onge said.

The goal is to help shape healthy preferences over the long term, she said: “If children are exposed to highly sweetened foods at an early age, we get concerned that this is what they expect and anticipate and desire as they grow.”

That’s why, she said, babies can be given a few sips of water starting at six months. Young infants don’t need water because their diet is basically all liquid.

“But as we start introducing solids, some fluid could be replenished through water consumption. So that could habituate them to consuming plain water,” she said.

Although pediatricians have advised against offering fruit juice to children before age 1 in the past, St-Onge said parents often want to introduce it too early. The guidelines say children 12 to 24 months old should drink no more than 4 ounces of 100% fruit juice a day.

“We came to the conclusion based on the evidence that children under a year of age should not be drinking fruit juice, but that as they get to a year old and older, it’s an acceptable drink,” Daniels said. “But it has to be in the right portion size.”

Having relatively straightforward recommendations endorsed by so many organizations should make life easier for parents, he said.

“It’s really the basics that are the key here. And that children ages 0 to 5 don’t need anything in their beverages. And I hope that’s a message that people will get.”